584 PLANTtE JAVANICiE EARIORES. 



Loxonia Mrsuta of Jack, which, however, it appears from 

 ■his description to resemble in so many points that it may 

 actually belong to the same species, differing only some- 

 what in the form of the leaves and in being less pubescent. 

 Dr. Jack did not find his plant in fruit, neither did he 

 ascertain the dehiscence of the capsule in L. discolor, from 

 which the character of the genus was formed. In both 

 species he describes the ovarium as bilocular, and the lobes 

 of the placentae as revolute. 



Dr. Horsfield found this plant in 1818, when he accom- 

 panied Sir Stamford Raffles on his journey from Padang — 

 one of the principal stations on the west coast of Sumatra 

 — to the Menangaboo country, growing on the ranges of 

 hills which extend parallel to the coast from N.W. to S.E., 

 in shaded forests between 500 and 1000 feet above the 

 level of the ocean. He did not observe it in Java. 



Tab. XXV. Fig. 1. Loxonia acuminata, natural size. 

 Fig. 2. A flower, magnified. Fiff. 3. An anthera, with a 

 portion of the filament. Fiff. 4. Style and stigma. Fiff. 5. 

 Capsule surroanded by the calyx. Fiff. 6. Capsule after 

 dehiscence, the calyx being removed. Fiff. 7. One of the 

 valves of the capsule. Fig. 8, Transverse section of the 

 ripe capsule. Fig. 9. A seed. Fig. 10. The embryo. 



Cyrtandrace^', to which Loxonia and Loxotis belong, 

 was established in 1822 ^ by the late Dr. Jack as a natural 

 order, according to him most nearly aUied to Bignoniacece, 

 but differing sufficiently from that family in the structure 

 of its fruit, especially in the placentation of its minute 

 seeds. 



The existence or absence of albumen in the ripe seed is 

 not expressly stated in his character of the order, nor is it 

 noticed in the description of any of the species he has 

 referred to it. It may, however, be presumed that he 



' 'Linn. Soc. Trans.,' rol. xiv. p. 23. 



